Tag Archives: green building

I’ll be posting something more thoughtful on living in the New North District of Chongqing later in the Summer, but for now, I wanted to put up a few pictures of our apartment and my current understanding of how this building (right) compares to my LEED Platinum apartment building in Portland.

Last week I was invited to attend an UPDIS project meeting at the Shenzhen Institute of Building Research (IBR) headquarters in the Futian District of the city. The building not only houses the sustainable architecture and engineering firm, but they built the showcase piece themselves.

After the meeting our team was given a guided tour of the site. IBR is about 20 stories with a 12 story outdoor atrium on the upper floors. The cut-away design of the courtyard allows natural daylight to penetrate deep into the interior of the building. An employee shared with me that the bi-level office suites create an interactive workplace that make collaboration easy. The upper-story outdoor decks, small playground and rooftop gardens all offer beautiful views of the surrounding lush hills and are kept cool by natural breezes.

Other sustainable design features of IBR include:

− Natural ventilation system, featuring adjustable windows

− Personalized ventilation distribution, under seats in auditorium, through tubes at each desk

− Solar photovoltaic panels

− Rain water collection, grey-water recycling and zero discharge of waste water

− Day lighting in underground parking garages through skylights

− Locally sourced building materials

− A program to encourage employees to take the stairs that involved dropping multi-colored pebbles into buckets and monthly prizes (an employee told me the popularity waned after the first year)

− And I am sure many more that were literally lost in translation

My only concern about the true “greenness” of IBR is the site selection of the building. Its hillside location made for great views of the Shenzhen skyline, but the surrounding land uses are no more than 2-3 stories and looked like functional industrial operations. Maybe this area is targeted for future development and added density? (Which in entirely possible!) But as of right now IBR seems out of place.

Overall it was great to be included in this project meeting and tour, even if the meeting was conducted entirely in Mandarin! Experiencing the dynamics and formalities of two firms working together is always interesting. Some things were the same (technical difficulties with projectors and conference callers) and others different (hot tea and warm snacks refilled throughout) than typical meetings in the States. I was even introduced to a University of Oregon Landscape Architecture student who has the luxury of staying onsite in one of the IBR visiting scholar live-work units during her internship.